
Rangers offense continues to struggle at the same time their pitching has been so good
Texas went into its day off Thursday at the bottom of the American League with a .219 batting average and 185 runs scored.
'Really they just need to get away. You know, it's been a little bit of a tough grind here lately,' Bochy said. ''And so hopefully, they freshen up, clear their heads and come back and be the offense that we keep saying that they're gonna be.'
The Rangers (27-30) just played 35 games in 37 days, going 14-21 and falling from the AL West lead to 4 1/2 games back. They scored two runs or fewer in 19 of those games, including this week against Toronto when both teams combined for seven total runs in a three-game series.
Meanwhile, the Texas pitching staff has been one of the best in the majors with its 3.19 ERA ranking third. Nathan Eovaldi (1.56 ERA) was third among individual pitchers, just ahead of Tyler Mahle at 1.64. Two-time Cy Young Award winner
Jacob deGrom
had a 2.42 ERA that ranked 12th.
After throwing six scoreless innings Wednesday against the Blue Jays, Mahle was asked how the pitchers handle things and stay competitive amid the offensive struggles.
'Kind of separate yourself from it. ... Hitting's the hardest thing to do in probably all of sports, right? So I mean I don't know anything about hitting,' Mahle said. 'We just try to keep the team in the game and they're gonna turn around. I think all of us know that. I know we keep saying that, but it's gonna happen. These guys are way too good. ... We're just waiting for it to happen. And then when it does, we are going to be really, really good.'
Offensive coordinator Donnie Ecker was fired May 4, after Texas scored 30 runs in a 2-9 stretch when half those runs came with a
season-high 15 runs
in a win against the Athletics. Ecker was in his fourth season with the Rangers, and helped them win their only World Series title in 2023.
Former big league All-Star infielder
Bret Boone
, the 56-year-old older brother of New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone, was hired to work with hitting coach Justin Viele and assistant hitting coach Seth Conner, who remained on Bochy's staff.
Marcus Semien, so long a staple leading off for Bochy, is now near the bottom of the order and last among AL qualifiers with a .173 average. Slugger Adolis García is 11 for 71 with 25 strikeouts over the past 20 games and is hitting .208 overall. Josh Smith, who took over in the leadoff spot, was in a 4-for-39 slide before having their only hit and two walks Wednesday, when they were shut out for the seventh time.
Joc Pederson and Jake Burger were their primary offseason acquisitions. Burger was went down to Triple-A earlier this month and is 3 for 27 his last eight games games. Pederson hit .131 in 46 games before a broken hand last week, and was as low as .052 during an 0-for-41 drought that was the franchise's longest hitless stretch since at least 1974.
Two-time World Series MVP shortstop
Corey Seager missed 28 games
and had two stints on the injured list because of a right hamstring strain before returning for the finale against the Blue Jays. Evan Carter has been out since May 17 because of a right quad strain, but could rehab and return to the big league lineup next week.
'Well, I'm not gonna stop believing, I mean we have a lot of baseball left. That's the worst thing you can do,' Bochy said. 'I think that's important for them, and this is a tough part of the game you have to deal with when you go through something like this. And we're men and we've got to handle it in the right way.'
___
AP MLB:
https://apnews.com/MLB
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
22 minutes ago
- New York Post
Cubs calling up top prospect Owen Caissie in huge move
The Cubs are making a splash. Chicago is calling up outfield prospect Owen Caissie from Triple-A Iowa, ESPN reported Wednesday night. The expectation is that Caissie, an Ontario, Canada native, will join the team for its series final against the Blue Jays. Advertisement National League outfielder and highly touted Cubs prospect Owen Caissie drives in a run during the seventh inning against the American League during the 2025 All-Star Futures Game at Truist Park on July 12, 2025. Brett Davis-Imagn Images The 23-year-old Caissie — the top Cubs prospect and No. 45 overall on MLB Pipeline — is in the middle of a fantastic season in the minor leagues. In his second full season in Triple-A, he's hit .289/.389/.566 with a career-high 22 home runs. Advertisement Across 499 games in the minors, he has totaled 81 home runs with an .873 OPS. He's always had plenty of swing-and-miss in his game, though, this year included, with a 28 percent punchout rate. The move comes amid a complete upheaval in the standings over the last month, which has seen the Cubs go from one game up in the National League Central on July 19 to 7 1/2 games back of the Brewers as Milwaukee rides a 12-game winning streak. Chicago does sit 4 games up in the NL wild-card race despite the recent stretch, however. Over the last two weeks, Chicago's offense has completely sputtered, coming into Wednesday night's 4-1 win over the Blue Jays with a .230 average and a .644 OPS over the last 14 days. Top Cubs prospect Owen Caissie looks on during the 2025 All-Star Futures Game at Truist Park. Getty Images Advertisement Chicago will now be without catcher Miguel Amaya, who was carted off the field on Wednesday after he sprained his ankle while running out a ground ball. 'It's swollen up pretty good already,' Counsell told reporters after the game. 'It's an IL [trip]. It's bad luck, unfortunately, and we're going to miss him.'


New York Post
22 minutes ago
- New York Post
Yankees fail to sweep Twins, blow chance to gain ground in AL playoff race
Access the Yankees beat like never before Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Greg Joyce about the inside buzz on the Yankees. Try it free Even the Yankees' long-standing dominance of the Twins is not boundless. Aaron Boone's team wasted an opportunity to gain ground on several contenders in the American League playoff chase, getting shut down by All-Star righty Joe Ryan and two relievers in a 4-1 loss Wednesday to deadline-gutted Minnesota at the Stadium after taking the first two games of the series. Advertisement The start was delayed nearly two hours by heavy rain, and the Yankees could not take advantage of losses by the Blue Jays, Red Sox, Guardians and Rangers earlier in the night. 4 Yerry De los Santos heads back to the mound after giving up a two-run hit to Kody Clemens on Aug. 13, 2025. Robert Sabo / New York Post With their first loss to the Twins in their past 10 head-to-head meetings, the Yanks (64-57) slipped 1 ¹/₂ games behind Boston for the second AL wild-card position and remained one game ahead of Cleveland for the final playoff spot. Advertisement The Yankees, who will open a five-game road trip Friday in St. Louis, still own an overall winning percentage of .735 (125-45) against the Twins since 2002. Rookie righty Cam Schlittler completed at least five innings for the fifth time in six major league starts, allowing one run on two hits with two walks and six strikeouts before manager Aaron Boone replaced him in a 1-1 game with Yerry De los Santos — after 86 pitches — to start the sixth. De los Santos faced three batters and gave up three hits, with all three runners scoring in the inning. The 24-year-old Schlittler retired the first nine batters he faced on just 34 pitches through three innings, including three consecutive strikeouts bridging the latter two frames. Advertisement 4 A frustrated Giancarlo Stanton walks back to the dugout after striking out in the sixth inning of the Yankees' loss to the Twins. Robert Sabo / New York Post The Yankees opened the scoring against Ryan (12-5) in the third on a two-out solo home run by Cody Bellinger, his second blast of the series and 22nd of the season. But that was their lone run against Ryan before he departed with two outs in the seventh. Giancarlo Stanton, who started his third straight game in right field, nearly took Ryan deep in the first on a scorched ball that was hauled in at the center field wall by Byron Buxton. Advertisement 4 Cody Bellinger belts a solo homer in the third inning of the Yankees' loss to the Twins. Robert Sabo / New York Post 'Starting with a great fastball, unique slot, kind of that low [angle]. So that really plays up, strike-thrower, so he's gonna make you earn it,' Boone said of Ryan before the game. 'Couple of good secondary offerings, but it starts with the fastball that's very unique. And if you're gonna have success, you gotta get to it a little bit.' CHECK OUT THE LATEST MLB STANDINGS AND YANKEES STATS The Twins had their first base runner against Schlittler on a leadoff walk to Trevor Larnach in the fourth and their first hit when Buxton followed with a 10-pitch double into the left field corner. An infield out by Luke Keaschall evened the score, but Buxton was stranded at third by Schlittler on a strikeout of Kody Clemens and a pop-up by Matt Wallner. 4 Minnesota starter Joe Ryan, who pitched into the seventh inning, held the Yankees to one run. AP Ryan struck out Stanton, Ben Rice, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Anthony Volpe in succession following Bellinger's blast. Advertisement The 1-1 knot remained until the Twins plated three runs against De los Santos in the sixth on two infield singles and a two-run double by Clemens, the son of former Yankees pitcher Roger Clemens. Go beyond the box score with the Bombers Sign up for Inside the Yankees by Greg Joyce, exclusively on Sports+. Thank you Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Enjoy this Post Sports+ exclusive newsletter! Check out more newsletters Royce Lewis made it 4-1 with a two-out RBI double against Mark Leiter Jr. Advertisement Volpe got as far as third after doubling off Ryan in the seventh, but lefty reliever Kody Funderburk struck out Austin Wells for the third out. Boone said after the game that righty-swinging Paul Goldschmidt was not available to pinch-hit in that spot due to a right-knee injury that may require an IL stint.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Jackson Holliday hits a game-ending double as the Orioles cool off the Mariners with a 4-3 win
BALTIMORE (AP) — Jackson Holliday hit a game-ending double, and the Baltimore Orioles snapped Seattle's eight-game win streak with a 4-3 victory over the Mariners on Wednesday night. Dylan Carlson set up Holliday's winning hit with a two-out single off Matt Brash (1-1). A hustling Carlson scored all the way from first on Holliday's liner into the corner in right field. It was the first walk-off win for the Orioles since Sept. 19, 2024. They were the only big league team without a walk-off victory. Ryan Mountcastle homered for Baltimore, and Keegan Akin (4-2) got two outs for the win. Julio Rodríguez had two hits and scored two runs for Seattle, which dropped into second place in the AL West, one game back of Houston. Josh Naylor had two RBIs. The Mariners had a 1-0 lead before the Orioles chased Logan Gilbert while scoring three times in the seventh. Mountcastle hit a leadoff drive for his fourth homer. Coby Mayo reached on a one-out single before Gilbert was replaced by Gabe Speier. Jeremiah Jackson greeted Speier with a pinch-hit triple, and he jogged home when first baseman Naylor committed a throwing error while trying to cut down Mayo at home. The Mariners rallied with two runs in the top of the ninth. Dominic Canzone drove in Eugenio Suárez with a tying sacrifice fly. Orioles left-hander Trevor Rogers pitched seven innings of one-run ball, lowering his ERA to 1.43 in 11 starts. Key moment Akin entered after Yennier Cano faltered in the ninth. He surrendered Canzone's sacrifice fly before retiring Jorge Polanco on a flyball to right. Key stat Rogers has pitched at least six innings and allowed two runs or less in each of his last seven starts. Up next Logan Evans (6-4, 4.36 ERA) starts for Seattle on Thursday, and Tomoyuki Sugano (9-5, 4.24 ERA) takes the mound for Baltimore in the rubber match of the three-game series. ___